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staysblazed_xo

♥ ⁴²⁰ queen ♥
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crim...meless-men-in-downtown-los-angeles/ar-AAABfqv


The man suspected of beating two homeless men to death and leaving two others in critical condition in Los Angeles County this month is also wanted for questioning in the disappearance of two of his relatives in Texas, police said.

Ramon Escobar, 47, was captured by police in Santa Monica early Monday and is being held on suspicion of murder in the deaths of two homeless men who were battered with a baseball bat as they slept in downtown Los Angeles. A third man was critically injured in those attacks. He was arrested shortly after he allegedly beat another homeless man in Santa Monica, police said.

After receiving word of his arrest in Southern California, Houston police officials told The Times that Escobar was also a person of interest in the August disappearances of Dina Escobar, 60 and Rogelio Escobar, 65.

Houston Police Lt. Humberto Lopez said the two went missing late last month. Rogelio Escobar was last seen near a convenience store in Houston on Aug. 26 and left a backpack on the porch of his Prudence Drive home the same day.

Dina Escobar soon got into her 2007 Chevy Uplander and went looking for her brother, and she hasn't been seen since, Lopez said.

Foul play is suspected in their disappearances, Lopez said. The charred remains of Dina Escobar's van were found in Galveston, about 50 miles outside of Houston, a few days later.

"He was their nephew. We are looking to talk to him," Lopez said. "We learned he was in L.A. Monday from detectives there with the arrest."

Investigators are also investigating Escobar's links to the killing of a 39-year-old San Gabriel man who was found beaten to death under the Santa Monica Pier last week and attacks on two other homeless men who suffered blunt force trauma injuries to their heads in early September.

Escobar was arrested in the 600 block of Broadway in Santa Monica shortly before 7:30 a.m. Monday after police responded to an attack on a homeless man in the 1500 block of 7th Street, said Lt. Saul Rodriguez, a Santa Monica police spokesman.

The victim in that case remains unconscious in critical condition, Rodriguez said. The attack bore resemblance to others that have unnerved the homeless community in recent weeks.
 
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Dina Escobar soon got into her 2007 Chevy Uplander and went looking for her brother, and she hasn't been seen since, Lopez said.

Foul play is suspected in their disappearances, Lopez said. The charred remains of Dina Escobar's van were found in Galveston, about 50 miles outside of Houston, a few days later.

"He was their nephew.
 
This must be what lynch mobs are for; when shit doesn't get done or can't get done by authorities.
 
The homeless coulda formed up posse's and gone hunting.
Has there ever been an Escobar that was a murder mayhem kinda pukebag?
 
A serial killer who admitted on Friday that he murdered his aunt and uncle in Houston in 2018 also admitted to five other slayings and seven assaults in California in exchange for a sentence of life without parole in California, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced Saturday.

“This man was a monster who killed strangers and members of his own family without a second thought,” Ogg said. “He choked unsuspecting people to death and bludgeoned others with heavy objects, sometimes while they slept. His callous actions showed that he never cared about anyone else.”

Ramon Escobar, 50, pleaded guilty to the deaths of his uncle, Rogelio Escobar, and aunt, Dina Escobar, in a crime spree that began Aug. 26, 2018.

First, Escobar killed his 65-year-old uncle using an old police baton because he felt disrespected, according to the release. The uncle had allegedly taken Escobar in and was letting him live at the home on Prudence Drive in southwest Houston.

Then, the suspect’s 60-year-old aunt went looking for her brother in her van, according to a release. Escobar hid under a pile of clothes in the van and then tried strangling her from behind with the baton. The two struggled to the ground, and he pressed his knee to her chest until she stopped breathing. Her burned-out van was found on a beach near Galveston. The aunt and uncle’s remains were found in a landfill.

After detectives with the Houston Police Department interviewed Escobar about his uncle’s disappearance, he fled to Santa Monica, California.

A month later, police there arrested him in the beating deaths of at least four homeless men. He told Los Angeles Police Department detectives about all of the deaths. Details from that interview were included in court documents for a capital murder charge.

Escobar was not extradited to Texas. On Friday, he appeared by Zoom from a Los Angeles County courtroom to accept a plea deal to the charges. When asked for his plea in his aunt’s case, Escobar said he was “very guilty.”

Harris County Assistant District Attorney Robert Buss said Friday’s plea deal ensures that Escobar will not be released from prison in California and if he ever is, he will have to serve two life sentences in Texas, which gave the victims’ families some closure.
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